Caritas and Habitus in Dan Jacobson's 'The Zulu and the Zeide'
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Date
2012-01
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
University of Zululand
Abstract
Dan Jacobson is a prolific writer whose oeuvre spans some 65 years, and includes a range of different texts. He has lived
in Britain for most of his adult life, but his roots are South African, and he set much of his early work in this country. It has
however fallen into relative critical obscurity. His 1959 story ‘The Zulu and the Zeide’has been widely anthologised, but
deserves more serious and more specific critical attention that it has recently received, because it evinces at an elemental
level the ways in which, and the extent to which, human caring was able to challenge, arrest and undermine the public
proscriptions set up to define and control interaction between people in our country during the apartheid years. This essay
explores the embodiment of caritas in the story, the spatialisation that reflects the boundaries (and the crossing of
boundaries) of the apartheid world he depicts, the micropolitics of power between the characters in the story and within
the complex of relationships that develop between them, and the ethics of our reading of the story
Description
Peer reviewed article published under Inkanyiso, Volume 4, Issue 1, Jan 2012, p. 1 - 9
Keywords
ethics of reading, Micropolitics of power, The Zulus, Caritas, Apartheid
Citation
Hooper, M., 2012. Caritas and Habitus in Dan Jacobson’s ‘The Zulu and the Zeide’. Inkanyiso: Journal of Humanities and Social Sciences, 4(1), pp.1-9.